"the eath, land," etc., often denotes "the ground," e.g., Matthew 10:29; Mark 8:6 . See EARTH.
"a bottom, base," is used of the "ground" in Acts 22:7 , suggestive of that which is level and hard. Cp. B, No. 1, below.
"land, country," is used of property, "ground," in Luke 12:16 , "the ground (of a certain rich man)." See COUNTRY.
a diminutive of No. 3, "a piece of land, a place, estate," is translated "parcel of ground" in John 4:5 . See FIELD.
"a support, bulwark, stay" (from hedraios, "steadfast, firm;" from hedra, "a seat"), is translated "ground" in 1 Timothy 3:15 (said of a local church); the RV marg., "stay" is preferable.
Notes: (1) In Mark 4:16 the RV rightly has "rocky places" (petrodes) for AV, "stoney ground." (2) In Acts 27:29 , for the AV, "rocks" the RV has "rocky ground," lit., "rough places," i.e., a rocky shore. (3) In Luke 14:18 , agros, "a field," is translated "a piece of ground," AV, RV, "a field." See FIELD.akin to A, No. 2: See DASH.
signifies "to lay the foundation of, to found" (akin to themelios, "a foundation;" from tithemi, "to put"), and is rendered "grounded" in Ephesians 3:17 , said of the condition of believers with reference to the love of Christ; in Colossians 1:23 , of their continuance in the faith. See FOUND.
(akin to Lat., humi, "on the ground," and homo, "man"), signifies "on the ground," John 9:6 , of the act of Christ in spitting on the "ground" before anointing the eyes of a blind man; in John 18:6 , "to the ground," of the fall of the rabble that had come to seize Christ in Gethsemane.